The following
description has been prepared entirely by the current owner, Roberts S. Fastov,
Esq., and, at the collector’s request, has not been edited by Sloans &
Kenyon
Note 1) At p. 193 of the American Art Directory and Art Annual, Volume 9,
the Engineers' Club reported that it had "purchased for its permanent
collection from the 1910 annual exhibition [the Engineers' Club annual art
exhibition) "The Florist's Daughter" by Charles W. Hawthorne."
This painting was specifically discussed and illustrated in pp. 354, 357 and
360, Volume 125 of The Magazine Antiques, which, inter alia, discussed: "CHARLES WEBSTER HAWTHORNE (1872-1930) The Florist's Daughter oil on canvas 40" by 30" signed lower left,
"Charles W. Hawthorne" Exhibition: HAWTHORNE RETROSPECTIVE June
16-September 17, 1961 Chrysler Art Museum of Art of Provincetown. This
painting was also mentioned in "Who's who in NY City and State," Volume 9, 1929 p. 766. A smaller version of this subject "The
Florist's Daughter" by Hawthorne was listed as No. 25 in the catalogue of
the permanent collection of the Hackley Art Gallery, Muskegon Michigan in 1920.
Note 2) Askart.com provides the
following extended biographical essay on Hawthorne:
"Charles
W. Hawthorne (1872-1930) was one of America’s most dynamic, penetrating and
forthright portrait painters, as well as a creative, inspiring teacher. A
painter’s painter, Hawthorne ran a summer school in Provincetown – the Cape
Cod School of Art – for over thirty years and made it a leading artists’
colony of plein-air impressionist-inspired talents. Hawthorne grew up in
Richmond, Maine, the son of Joseph Jackson Hawthorne and Cornelia Jane Smith
Hawthorne. Having discovered his artistic abilities at an early age, Charles
convinced his parents to allow him to study in NY in 1893, at the Art
Students League then at the National Academy of Design. His teachers included
Frank Vincent DuMond, George de Forest Brush, and William Merritt Chase.
During the day, Hawthorne earned his living as a dock worker and he was
employed at J. and R. Lamb Studios, a stained glass factory. In 1896,
Hawthorne enrolled in Chase’s summer school at Shinnecock Hills. During the
following season, he was acting as Chase’s assistant and in NY he helped him
organize the Chase School. There he met his future wife, Ethel M. Campbell,
the corresponding secretary, and one of Lorado Taft’s students. Hawthorne’s
son Joseph, whom Hawthorne depicted as The Fencer (Sheldon Memorial
Art Gallery, Lincoln, Nebraska), described how his father lived in a
fisherman’s shack at Shinnecock (Hawthorne on Painting, 1938, p. xi). .To
Hawthorne’s surprise, Chase abandoned the Chase School without considering
Hawthorne’s future. His only consolation was a trip to Europe, which gave
Hawthorne an appreciation for the old masters, including Titian, Frans Hals,
and Rembrandt. Their classic monumentality was combined with Chase’s robust,
painterly Munich School technique to form Hawthorne’s own forceful, sincere
style. In Zandvoort, Holland, Hawthorne discovered the Hague School and he
visited the Frans Hals Museum. He declared, “When I came here and saw the
Hals, I was so overpowered with the brushwork, I couldn’t see anything else.”
(Hawthorne to Ethel Marion Campbell, 24 August 1898). 1899 marks Hawthorne’s
discovery of Provincetown, still an unspoiled, inexpensive fishing village,
an ideal place to start an artists’ colony dedicated to outdoor figure
painting. He moved into an old house on Miller Hill, which overlooks the Bay:
in 1907 he added a large barn-like building for his school. For
his students Hawthorne posed the model in the brilliant sunlight so that they
could concentrate on rendering the effects of light. Hawthorne on Painting
(1938) begins with a chapter on the outdoor figure. The figure in sunlight,
for the beginner, was a clearly seen silhouette-like object. “The fundamental
thing [for Hawthorne was] the mechanics of putting one spot of color next to
another.” (Hawthorne on Painting, 1938, p. 23). Advising students to
avoid detail, Hawthorne wanted them to capture the model’s basic forms, using
a limited range of values. The figure was not to be conceived as a softly
modeled form, as were the traditional, academic engravings of sculpture with
their full range of values, the method that was taught in the European
academies for centuries. Like Claude Monet, Hawthorne told his students to
avoid drawing, while putting down spots of color. “Let color make form — do
not make form and color it” (Hawthorne on Painting, 1938, p. 26).
Students were further advised to paint with a palette knife, or with a broad
brush; since they were young and free, he wanted them to paint freely.
Ideally, students would convey “the thrill of seeing the thing for the first
time” (p. 29). Most of all, Hawthorne encouraged students to be bold, even to
be a bit brutal. Practically like a Fauve, Hawthorne insisted: “Go out like a
savage, as if paint had just been invented.” (p. 26). At the weekly Saturday
morning critiques, students who successfully rendered the model in a broad
manner by juxtaposing interesting areas of color were praised. Those who
attempted to be decorative, those who approached the subject timidly, were
criticized. The authoritative and imposing Hawthorne was described as
intimidating by many a “weak-kneed” pupil (Seckler, 1977, p. 23). In
1903, Hawthorne married Ethel, and he began collecting impressive awards with
the National Academy’s First Hallgarten Prize in 1904 for Girl in Green.
Then came the Second Hallgarten Prize in 1906, a silver medal at the Buenos
Aires Exposition in 1910, and in the following year he was elected a full
academician and was awarded the NAD’s Clarke Prize for The Trousseau
(Metropolitan Museum of Art). Hawthorne won the First Altman Prize and
Isidore Gold Medal from the National Academy for The Offering, a
modern version of the Madonna and Child with Hawthorne’s favorite
accessory--a platter of recently caught fish from P-Town’s docks. Throughout
his life, Hawthorne was winning prizes, too numerous to list here (at least
twenty more followed). Hawthorne’s biography is fairly uneventful, apart from
a trip to Italy in 1906 and another to Spain and France toward the end of his
life; he stayed in Provincetown until his death in 1930. In 1909, Hawthorne
was appointed to take over Robert Henri’s classes at the NY School of Art In
Provincetown Hawthorne resisted the onslaught of modernists and the
“invasion” from Greenwich Village. This bohemian circle included journalist
and novelist Hutchins Hapgood, George Cram Cook and his wife Susan Glaspell,
Mabel Dodge, John Reed, William Zorach, and Eugene O’Neill. The rebels who
went there in 1915 had lost their idealism. Hapgood (1939, p. 391) explained,
“All existing theories had been shown to be impotent,” upon the realization
that a terrible war was inevitable. Then O’Neill entered the scene, just then
“coming out of a season-long drinking binge” (Watson, 1991, p. 219). His play
Bound East for Cardiff opened on July 28, 1916. It was a wild party
thrown by those disillusioned crusaders and anti-establishment artists,
sexually liberated couples, such as O’Neill and Louise Bryant, artists
promenading in Cubist costumes, nude bathing parties, and what Hapgood
characterized as a general spirit of suspicion and ill-will, a “certain
instinct to destroy each other’s personalities.” Although
opposed to these avant-garde “antics,” Hawthorne took part in the
Beachcombers, a low-brow but charity-oriented artists’ club, restricted to
men, who met in a fish house called the Hulk. Yet when it came to aesthetics,
Hawthorne stuck vigorously to his realist guns — he had control of the
Provincetown Art Association, and “virtually banned the modernists from
exhibiting there,” except for E. Ambrose Webster’s faction (Jacobs, 1985, p.
178). Webster, Hawthorne’s rival, had opened a school in 1900. At that time,
his bright Impressionist style and Fauve palette were shockingly progressive.
Webster was considered a modernist: he exhibited at the Armory Show, studied
under Gleizes in Paris in the early 1920's, and ended up in league with
Demuth, Zorach, and Karl Knaths in the Provincetown Group Show in 1930.
Still, he remained a representational artist and he and Hawthorne continued
to be friendly rivals. In 1915, Hawthorne painted The Crew of the
Philomena Manta (Town Hall, Provincetown), perhaps his masterpiece, which
features a robust group of Portuguese fishermen hauling in the day’s catch.
Around the same time, his student Edwin Dickinson (1891-1978) was executing
his dynamic Interior (Private collection). Hawthorne died before
abstract painter Hans Hofmann established his own Provincetown school.
Ironically, the latter occupied Hawthorne’s house and studio beginning in
1935. Hawthorne
encouraged virility and urged upon his students the importance of direct
expression — taught them to differentiate between color and tone and to
re-create the illusion of light without employing the Impressionists’
formula. In this sense he was a modernist, but he was never willing to go the
length (p. 96). The “spiritual quality, this insight into character” and his
imagination placed Hawthorne “on a higher level that the majority” of
painters” (p. 102). Although
Hawthorne advised students to treat the figure as a still-life element, he
rarely did this in his own works. His figures are far from lifeless objects
set into a formalist scheme. In stressing direct observation of nature over
learning from the old masters, Hawthorne placed personal creativity at the
highest rank. Perhaps he assumed that once students mastered the basic
skills, they would perfect their art by analyzing and experiencing Rembrandt,
Titian, Leonardo, and Giorgione — those painters who exercised such a
profound influence on his art, beyond technique. Like many American
Impressionists, Hawthorne took only the elements from the Impressionist
aesthetic that he wanted. One of America’s greatest artists, Hawthorne was
acknowledged by another great teacher, Hans Hofmann (in Hawthorne on
Painting, 1938, p. viii), as a “robust and provocative” painter with “an
abundant, vigorous mind, of a cataclysmic temperament.” Hofmann saw Hawthorne
as an American individualist, in the tradition of Whistler and Ryder. Add to
this Renaissance monumentality a heavy dose of Chase’s dashing technique, an
almost Ash Can preoccupation with finding beauty in the ordinary, the ugly,
and the commonplace, and an inflexible aspiration toward creative originality,
and you will have defined Hawthorne’s art. Sources: Submitted
by Richard H. Love and Michael Preston Worley, Ph.D." |
Note 3) The Oxford Dictionary of
American Art and Artists made the
following statement regarding Hawthorne in its brief overview of Hawthorne:
"He also appreciated the work of James Abbott McNeill Whistler and
William Merritt Chase, his most influential teacher (Emphasis added)."
The foregoing underscored passage is
relevant, because "The Florist's Daughter" was painted by Hawthorne,
c. 1900, shortly after Hawthorne's 1898 trip to Europe. Among other artists,
Hawthorne was exposed to and much appreciated James Abbott McNeill Whistler's
paintings, as prior to leaving for Europe, he had studied with the famous
American Impressionist, William Merritt Chase. "The Florist's
Daughter" definitely betrays the influence of Chase, but even more so,
that of Whistler. The highly ethereal and Impressionistic brush work, subdued,
darker coloring and attempt to portray the inner glow of the daughter of the
florist, together with the oriental vase with flowers on the table, makes clear
Whistler's influence on Hawthorne when he painted "The Florist's
Daughter." This portrait is not consistent with Hawthorne's complex
coloring and great vigor and broad strokes that he used to paint his most
famous later works of men, particularly, the rugged fisherman of Provincetown,
Massachusetts and elsewhere and his fish and seafood still lifes. However,
the tenderness, sensitivity and subtlety of "The Florist's Daughter"
is historically significant for Hawthorne and his oeuvre, as it foreshadows and
is the precursor of his later tender, sensitive and subtle portraits of women
and girls, some of which manifested the subdued coloring of "The Florist's
Daughter," that made Hawthorne cherished as a leading American artist, the
most famous portrait artist of his time and has rendered his portrait studies
extremely valuable at auction. Thus, "The Florist's Daughter" is a
very large, 40 in. x 30 in., subtly beautiful portrait study, which is of true
historical significance and is the kind of painting that any collector of
Hawthorne, Whistler, Chase or American art should consider bidding based on the
above presale estimate of $40,000-$80,000 for the foregoing reasons and those
set forth below, including: a) the following auction records regarding
Hawthorne's portraits or other sensitive, subtle studies of women and girls,
like "The Florist's Daughter," most of which are smaller, some
significantly so, than the 40" x 30" size of "The Florist's
Daughter" and are not as historically significant on Hawthorne's later
oeuvre; and b) Hawthorne's extended biographical profile in note 2 above),
which demonstrates that Hawthorne was one of the most important and honored
American artists of the early 20th century.
Title/Subject:
Impressionist Figure Signed. Oil on canvas. 36 in. x 32 in.
sold for $43,750 on 3/5/2009 at Christie’s, NY Title/Subject:
Blue
Kimono Signed. Oil on canvas. 29.70 in. x 24.70 in. sold for $57,600 on
12/1/2005 at Christie’s, NY
|